At least 24 killed in Kashmir attack on tourists: Indian police source

Paramedics and police personnel carry a wounded tourist at a hospital in Anantnag, after the attack in Kashmir © Tauseef MUSTAFA / AFP
At least 24 people were killed in Indian-administered
Kashmir when gunmen opened fire on tourists on Tuesday, a senior police officer
told AFP, with authorities calling it the worst attack on civilians in years.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi decried the "heinous
act" in the summer retreat of Pahalgam, pledging that the attackers "will
be brought to justice".
A tour guide told AFP he reached the scene after hearing
gunfire and transported some of the wounded away on horseback.
"I saw a few men lying on the ground looking like they
were dead," said Waheed, who gave only one name.
The attack targeted tourists in Pahalgam, which lies about
90 kilometres (55 miles) by road from the key city of Srinagar.
The senior police officer in the region, speaking on
condition of anonymity, described a massacre in which at least 24 people had
been killed.
No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, but
rebels in the Muslim-majority region have waged an insurgency since 1989.
They are seeking independence or a merger with Pakistan,
which controls a smaller part of the Kashmir region and, like India, claims it
in full.
The killings come a day after Modi met with US Vice
President JD Vance, who is on a four-day tour of India with his wife Usha and
children.
Vance offered his and Usha's condolences to the
"victims of the devastating terrorist attack in Pahalgam".
"Our thoughts and prayers are with them as they mourn
this horrific attack," he wrote on X.
Chief Minister Omar Abdullah said that "the attack is
much larger than anything we've seen directed at civilians in recent
years", with the death toll "still being ascertained".
"This attack on our visitors is an abomination,"
he said in a statement. "The perpetrators of this attack are animals,
inhuman and worthy of contempt."
An AFP reporter at Pahalgam spoke to another witness of the
shooting, who asked not to be identified.
"The militants, I can't say how many, came out of the
forest near an open small meadow and started firing," said the witness,
who cares for the horses that are popular with tourists in the area.
"They were clearly sparing women and kept shooting at
men, sometimes a single shot and sometimes many bullets, it was like a
storm."
The witness said dozens of people fled as the gunmen opened
fire.
"They all started running around in panic", he
added.
"We tried to comfort them, but they were just screaming...
we helped carry some injured out of there on ponies."
India's interior minister, Amit Shah, flew to Kashmir and
vowed those responsible would be caught.
"Those involved in this dastardly act of terror will
not be spared, and we will come down heavily on the perpetrators with the
harshest consequences," Shah said in a statement.
One security source said that foreign tourists were among
those shot, but there was no official confirmation.
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar, in a post on X, said
he was "deeply saddened by the heinous terror attack on tourists",
adding that his nation "stands united with India".
Medics at a hospital in Anantnag said they had received some
of the wounded, including at least two with gunshot wounds, one with a bullet
injury to the neck.
Rahul Gandhi, leader of India's main opposition Congress
party, called the killings "heartbreaking".
India has an estimated 500,000 soldiers permanently deployed
in the territory, but fighting has decreased since Modi's government revoked
Kashmir's limited autonomy in 2019.
"Their evil agenda will never succeed. Our resolve to
fight terrorism is unshakable, and it will get even stronger,"
Modi said in a statement following the attack.
In recent years, the authorities have heavily promoted the
mountainous region as a holiday destination, both for skiing during the winter
months and to escape the sweltering heat during the summer elsewhere in India.
Around 3.5 million tourists visited Kashmir in 2024,
according to official figures, the majority domestic visitors.
In 2023, India hosted a G20 tourism meeting in Srinagar
under tight security in a bid to show that what officials call "normalcy
and peace" were returning after a massive crackdown.
A string of resorts is being developed, including some
close to the heavily militarised de facto border that divides Kashmir between
India and Pakistan.
India regularly blames Pakistan for backing gunmen behind
the insurgency.
Islamabad denies the allegation, saying it only supports
Kashmir's struggle for self-determination.
The worst attack in recent years took place in Pulwama in
February 2019, when insurgents rammed a car packed with explosives into a
police convoy, killing 40 and wounding at least 35 others.
The deadliest recent attack on civilians was in March 2000,
when 36 people, all Indian civilians, were killed.
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